Authors: Edna Buchanan
Kathleen kissed him, her mouth warm and sweet, fingers laced gently behind his neck. “Welcome home, Frank.”
Eyes wet, they entered, hand in hand, enveloped in applause, love and laughter. Fresh flowers, silver and crystal glistened in the dining room, his favorite foods piled high on the good china. The bay danced and sparkled in the splashy midday light beyond the windows. His eyes rested lovingly on his oldest girl. Shandi looked like nineteen going on thirty-five. Her once long dark and silky mane was now short and sleek, a mottled tricolor he had never before seen on a human scalp, and her ears bristled with gold wire earrings. Lots of them. Smiling, he fought the urge to count how many times needles had pierced those tender pubescent lobes. She kept pushing her shorn hair back behind her ears, making it hard to resist. But to mention it now would be bad timing. She came into his arms for a gentle hug. Was her nail polish black?
He sat at the head of the table. The food looked mouthwatering but tasted oddly flat. “Do we have any hot sauce, Tabasco?” he asked, as everybody dug in. “And I’d love a cold beer.”
Kathleen, filling his ice tea glass, looked startled. “Who is this man? Don’t let Lourdes hear you,” she murmured accusingly. “She’s been in the kitchen since dawn. You’ve never liked hot sauce, and since when are you a beer drinker? What went on in that hospital when I wasn’t there? Did they give you new taste buds, too?”
She leaned down and he tasted her lips as they brushed his.
“All I know,” he said, peering down the neckline of her dress at her breasts, “is that you should always give your heart what it craves.”
“Is that so? We’ll see.”
“Would you check the bar,” he persisted, “for the beer,and the Tabasco? Didn’t we keep some there for Bloody Marys?”
The beer quenched a craving he had felt since soon after his surgery, and the Tabasco was exactly what his food needed.
Hours later, company gone, they strolled out to watch the setting sun change the bay from sea green to shimmering gold, then bloodred to black. Tree frogs, crickets and night birds began their chorus as the night city across the bay awoke in a cacophony of color. Mirrored skyscrapers, multicolored neon and the glow of sodium-vapor anticrime lamps, underlined by the moving lights of traffic.
He felt slightly hurt that both girls went out with friends his first night home, but was thrilled to be alone with his wife. He swallowed his pills promptly at ten o’clock, then arm in arm, they slowly climbed the balustraded stairs.
“It’s so good to be home,” he sighed, as she came to bed. Her nightdress was white and silky, her lustrous hair brushed and loose around her shoulders. She tapped in a sequence of numbers on a bedside panel to arm the security system and turn out the lights.
He reached for her in the dark, his lips finding her throat.
“Do you think that we … ?”
“Yes, oh yes,” he whispered.
“Are you sure you can … ?”
“They say the Captopril affects some men. So far, no problem.” He guided her hand to his penis. “I’ve been this way all afternoon.”
“Isn’t it too soon after surgery? How—”
“If you help me, love. You know they said it’s okay, I just can’t do any strenuous pushing or pulling for a few weeks.” He sensed her hesitation.
“So,” she said lightly, “you expect me to do everything.”
“I could live with that.”
Her silky gown brushed across his face as she pulled it over her head and tossed it aside. Her fingers gently traced the still angry scar.
“Let’s turn on the light,” he whispered.
“The light?” she murmured.
“I want to see you.”
“Aren’t we full of surprises.” She reached across him, her bare breast resting against his cheek as she switched on the bedside lamp, then sat on her heels, back arched, eyes focused almost shyly on his face. The sight of her naked startled him for an instant, it was as though he had expected another body, more compact and muscular. Had it been so long that he did not even recognize his own wife?
“What’s wrong?” she asked, as he stared.
“Nothing,” he whispered. “You’re beautiful.” More softly rounded after twenty years and two children, she was still the same blue-eyed girl he had married.
“You were right.” She gently straddled him. “You definitely do not suffer the dread side effects from your medication.”
“Lucky us,” he breathed.
Gingerly she caressed and fondled him, never fully relaxed. “Are you sure this is all right?” she kept asking.
“Yes, yes, yes.”
“Frank, I really think we should talk to the doctor to be certain …” He wilted against her thigh as she pulled away at the wrong moment.
Not the greatest sex they had ever enjoyed together, he thought; she was nervous and uncertain and he felt … different. But it was no total fizzle either. God bless modern medicine and pharmaceuticals. He was home, alive, still a man.
He felt the delayed reaction of his transplanted heart, nowpounding passionately, and smiled ruefully. The doctors had explained that his new heart would not immediately respond to a sudden scare or the sight of a naked woman. Like pumps, transplanted hearts are hooked up to all the vital plumbing but not to the sympathetic nerves that deliver instant messages from the brain, speeding the pulse. Enzymes in his blood stream would do the job instead, accelerating his heartbeat, but they take longer, requiring more time to warm up and to cool down after exertion.
Getting used to his new heart would take time. His thoughts were scattered and restless. Sex was not the problem, he knew that would get better. He was lucky to be alive, lucky to have Kathleen’s soft presence beside him in the dark. When working his way through college, he had had two jobs, ambition and no time for love. Then he had seen her. He had earned extra money chauffeuring a retired professor who no longer drove but still babied the ancient Cadillac in his garage. Frank drove him to the supermarket, to medical appointments, on errands, and studied while waiting. He had had a four-o’clock class that afternoon and was rushing the old professor through the library, when there she was, reading
Peter Pan
to a group of rapt preschoolers.
He perched on a pint-sized chair, as enthralled as the other bright-eyed listeners until the professor finally came looking for him. Frank had returned to the library several times, lurking like a pervert in the children’s section, but she was not there. Then, by chance, he spotted her on campus and followed like a puppy.
She was from Connecticut, a drama major who volunteered to read to children bussed in from disadvantaged neighborhoods. Soon they were on their first date in the professor’s borrowed Caddy and Frank was the disadvantaged child basking in her nurturing radiance. Who would havethought, he wondered, that he still would be, nearly twenty-two years later?
He should have been totally content at this moment.
“What are you thinking?” Her words were dreamy in the dark.
He paused. “Being home today with you and the kids was insanely awesome, as Casey would say, but something’s bothering me and I just realized what it is.” He propped himself up on one elbow. “I keep thinking about the donor.”
“But he’s gone,” Kathleen said softly, taking his hand.
“I know.” He sat up. “I’m surrounded by the people I love. What about his family?”
“Your job now is to take good care of yourself.”
“But what about his wife? His kids? There must be something I can do for them.”
“You don’t even know if the donor was a man or a woman.” She sighed. “It could be a teenager.”
“It was a man,” he said, without hesitation.
“How do you know?” She sat up, too, and began to massage his shoulders and the back of his neck. “I thought they didn’t tell you.”
“They didn’t. But I know. It was a guy.”
“How can you be so sure?”
He thought for a moment. “I don’t know how, but I know. Maybe I overheard something at the hospital when I was groggy.”
“Get some rest, sweetheart.” She kissed his shoulder and sank back down on her pillow. “Coming home was a big hurdle. You’re exhausted.”
“There must be something I can do to thank them, to show my gratitude.”
“Bad idea,” she said sleepily. “They’re grieving, trying toput a loss behind them. Intruding into their lives would only remind them of their tragedy.”
She rolled over and curled into her usual sleep position. He stared at the ceiling, mind racing. His gut said it was the right thing to do.
When our peril is past, shall our gratitude sleep?
Who said that? Was it his father? What was it from? he wondered. Why did he recall it? The phrase repeated, an endless loop through his mind, until restless, he slipped out of bed, careful not to disturb Kathleen. He tapped in the bypass code on the alarm keypad, then walked to the French doors, opened them quietly and stepped barefoot onto the balcony. The night was hushed, the stars pinpricks of white fire in the cool majesty of a vaulted heaven. The water shimmered like rumpled silk below the bridge, a skeletal rigging to the south. There was no traffic at this hour, only an occasional car overriding the yellow beacon of its own headlights.
As he inhaled a deep breath of night air, a sudden movement caught his eye. From shadows below, as though emerging from a sudden crack in the darkness, a solitary figure appeared on the span. Frank blinked. The lone pedestrian was still there, on the bridge between DiLido and Rivo Alto. The figure was tall with a hint of urgency in his long-legged stride. Perhaps his car had broken down, Frank thought, as he watched, mesmerized. Though his features were obscured by distance and the night, the man looked oddly familiar. He paused at the crest of the bridge, his silhouette silvered by moonlight. Then, as though aware he was being watched, the figure turned to stare directly up to the balcony where Frank stood. Fear and foreboding rushing over him like water in an icy stream, Frank shrank back, retreated inside and closed the doors. When he peered through the glass a moment later, the bridge was empty in the silent night.
Frank fought the urge to rush downstairs to check thedoors and the locks. He feared for his family. His daughters were out there somewhere sharing the same night with that spectral figure. Casey was sleeping over at her best friend’s on Bay Point. But Shandi … His stomach pitched. He forced himself to think rationally, crawled back into bed and lay there listening until she came in. He heard her visit the kitchen. The slam of the refrigerator door, minutes later the sound of her footsteps on the stairs to her room. He arose again once all was quiet, padded down the hall and saw the reassuring glow of light under her door as he went downstairs to be sure that she had turned the dead bolt behind her and reset the alarm. Without switching on lights, he moved easily through each room. He knew this house so well, but tonight it seemed different, almost strange—and frightening.
He returned to bed and a fitful doze, but someone called his name and he awoke disoriented. The room was unfamiliar. Who was he? Where was he? The answers came to him slowly as he lay there pondering how odd it was that the hospital had installed a ceiling fan in his room exactly like the one above his bed at home.
H
e got star treatment. Other members of the transplant team looked in during his exam, exclaiming and beaming at his progress like proud parents. His tests had continued to go so well that after three months he was being released with only six-month checkups for the next year. After that, if all went right, only an annual exam.
He did not ask the question that nagged at him until he was fully dressed, seated with Kathleen in front of a cluttered desk and a small bank of computer equipment in his surgeon’s small office.
O’Hara frowned. “This sleeping problem you mentioned … I could prescribe—”
“No, thanks.” Frank grinned. “I take enough medication now. Everything seems to be working fine, no point in tinkering with the formula. It’s annoying as hell, but I can handle it. I think I’m still adjusting to the new heart, to being home, and being healthy again. I’m catching catnaps during the day. You can hold the prescription for now, Doctor, but there is something I do want.” He took out his Mont Blanc pen and his small leather pocket briefcase, poised to jot down the information.
The doctor listened to his request, his lean body relaxed in his leather chair, his long slim fingers pyramided in front of him. “No,” he said simply, then leaned forward and began to move around some papers on the desk in front of him. “The policy of the transplant program is to maintain confidentiality and I’m in total support of that.”
“In no way do I intend to intrude upon the family,” Frank said confidently, “but I do want to help. I’m in a position to do so, and I owe them so much.”
Dr. O’Hara shook his head. “Not necessary,” he said briskly, his voice pleasant. “Donor families know that their consent is a gift. Accept it in that context.”
“Please understand.” Frank was firm, but polite. “I merely want to know if the family has a mortgage, or a child in need of an education. I was left fatherless myself at an early age. I know what that’s like. If I can spare some kid—”
“And you turned out all right.” O’Hara studied him shrewdly, eyes narrowed. “Didn’t you?”
“I only want to make their lives a little easier.” Refusals were foreign to Frank. He did not digest them easily.
“Focus on your own life, Frank.”
The two men, each accustomed to having his own way, studied each other for a long moment, tension building. Kathleen stirred uncomfortably beside him, placing her hand over his in a cautionary gesture. Indignant, he wanted to shake it off.
“Look,” the doctor said, “in the early days of transplants, recipients and donor families were able to meet. Many did. In some cases it didn’t work out. There were some real problems, in fact. That’s why a policy of confidentiality was adopted, and believe me, Frank, it’s better this way.”
“I agree.” Kathleen sighed in relief. “Thank you, Doctor. Frank, are you sure you don’t want the doctor to prescribe something that will help you sleep through the night?”
He shook his head, he didn’t trust his voice.
O’Hara got to his feet, smiling. “Go home, enjoy your life,” he ordered good-naturedly.
The man’s refusal was too glib, too quick, Frank thought on the elevator. Perhaps he knew the question was coming. He studied Kathleen out of the corner of his eye. Had she spoken to the doctor? Gone behind his back?
They celebrated his sterling checkup over lunch at the newest “in” restaurant on South Beach. He fought his frustration, relying on his usual allies, logic and reason. They never let him down. No need to go to war with the doctor, or with Kathleen. He smiled across the table at her as they dined on smoked pheasant served by a muscular waiter who wore a T-shirt announcing that
Only my teeth are straight.
His wife’s attitude and the doctor’s stubborn resolve confounded him, but there were other ways to learn the information he needed. And he did need it. He was right. He was never more sure of anything. The decision to track down the family of his heart was exciting and slightly subversive, an irresistible challenge.
He could hardly wait to finish lunch.
Selling F.D. Douglas, Inc., had been wrenching. Frank had built his business from nothing, lived it, breathed it, ate it. Itwas his life’s work. But selling was the wisest course of action when he was a dying man, a name on a list of forty-eight thousand patients awaiting organ transplants. His company brought even more than he had expected, a goddamn fortune he was too sick to enjoy. What good was the money? Money could not buy him a new heart. But he had known all along that if he beat the odds and survived, he could and would start over. He had kept a small but comfortable office in Miami Beach, on Lincoln Road Mall, and one employee, his longtime trusted secretary. Sue Ann was like family, devoted to him and the job. Divorced, fifty-five and efficient, she lived within walking distance, in a condo with her cat. Her husband had remarried and was raising a new family with the much younger woman he had abandoned her for. But Sue Ann was not alone in the world. Her son was a career Marine with a wife and children, and she had a daughter, a struggling would-be actress in New York. Frank had kept Sue Ann on the payroll even after he was far too ill to conduct business. He had arranged, in the event of his death, for her to remain on full salary and benefits for as long as necessary, one year minimum, to help wrap up his affairs, close the office and assist Kathleen with the inevitable details. His alternate plan, now in motion, was to ease back into business on a smaller scale, look into some investments and dabble in real estate.
He called the office after lunch, from the privacy of his study, and instructed Sue Ann to arrange an appointment ASAP with Nicolas Lucca.
He could probably handle this little job himself, Frank thought, but he might tread on some toes. Lucca was a pro, discreet and efficient, and Frank trusted him.
From a Chicago family of cops, Lucca had resisted the badge until moving to South Florida for the health of a chronically ill child. He joined the Metro-Dade police departmentat age thirty-nine, largely for the benefits and the medical plan, he said later. Transferred to homicide, he quickly established a reputation. The new man on the squad was always saddled with the missions impossible: unidentifiable victims left in fields or murky Everglades canals. More than whodunits, they were whoisits, nameless victims who could be drug dealers, illegal aliens or felons on the run from anywhere. Luck, they said, when Lucca solved the first one. He solved the next one, and the one after that. Then his superiors dusted off an old, cold case nobody could crack. He solved it. He closed eleven in a row. He had a talent.
The local newspaper,
The Miami Herald,
featured his accomplishments in its Sunday magazine. The detective scowled off the cover, wearing a rumpled trench coat and a menacing sneer. The story made him a local hero. Though they had never met, Frank dictated a brief note of congratulations after the article appeared, thanking the detective for his efforts on behalf of all crime victims.
Murder always intrigued Frank. Homicide investigations had fascinated him since childhood, when a detective was kind to him and his mother during the worst moments of their lives. He had planned at one time to apply to the FBI Academy, but by the time he graduated from the University of Miami with a degree in accounting he was mad with love for Kathleen and driven by the same entrepreneurial zeal that had consumed his father, that tragic figure, the man he scarcely knew.
The article spelled the end to Lucca’s police career. The publicity was priceless, the name recognition too valuable to waste. His streak unbroken at twelve, he turned in his badge, got rid of the rumpled raincoat, which had been borrowed for the photo shoot, bought some expensive suits and set upshop in North Dade where he practiced PI work for lawyers in Miami and Fort Lauderdale.
Frank had forgotten his note until a reply arrived months later, Lucca’s new business card. From then on, Frank had hired him when he needed to sort out legitimate competitors, investors and would-be business associates from the con men, scam artists and fast-buck operators South Florida is famous for. Tough and plainspoken, Lucca was a straight shooter, a class act who took no window-peeping or divorce cases. He relished being his own boss and probably banked more in a good week than his squad-room buddies took home in a month. Frank looked forward to seeing him again.
Kathleen strolled with him to the car. She had made it a habit since he resumed driving, urging him to be careful, kissing his cheek. She still fussed and worried, despite the fact that her once-dying husband now exuded more energy than he ever had. He often wondered if his recycled heart had belonged to an athlete, or someone much younger than himself. Kathleen had been right about one thing, he thought, the Mercedes. Smooth and responsive, it handled like a dream.
Lucca was punctual, as always. He was a big man; his legs looked too long for his rugged torso. His black hair bristled, thick and shiny, with a brushy mustache to match and a deep, distinctive voice that evoked the shadowy hills of Sicily. In his well-cut dark blue suit and immaculate white shirt he resembled a suave soap opera villain or a Mafia kingpin more than a former cop.
They exchanged a firm handshake as Lucca appraised Frank and the new, downsized office. “You still have a secretary?”
“Yeah, she’s out.”
“What you need here, boss, is security cameras to moni-tor the reception area so when you’re alone, you can see who arrives before they see you.”
“Good idea. Handle it for me.”
“Sure. Heard you had ticker problems and got rid of the business. How ya doing?”
Frank took his seat behind the desk as Lucca folded his big frame onto the soft leather sofa. “Had some surgery,” he said evenly. “Kept my secretary and this small office and I’m about ready to get back into business.”
“Need some new associate checked out?”
“It’s personal this time.”
Something in Lucca’s eyes changed. “I don’t do marital problems.”
“Good.” Frank smiled. “I’m a lucky man. I don’t have any. This is something else. You knew I was sick.”
The detective nodded.
“You probably didn’t know how sick. Sudden death saved my life.” He paused. “Somebody else’s death, not mine.”
The detective’s expression never changed as Frank laid it out, explaining what he wanted. “He died on Saturday, July twelfth. That’s the day I was reborn. I don’t know how long he was on life support before they gave me his heart. What do you think?”
“No problemo.” Lucca looked pleased. “First one of these I’ve had.”
A man accustomed to daily death and disorder must find a fresh challenge a welcome diversion, Frank thought.
Lucca scratched his neck and took out a small spiral notebook. “From what I understand, the body-to-body window for a heart is only a matter of hours.”
“Four to six hours, with four preferable,” Frank said. “It’s called ischemic time, that’s how long the organ can survive outside a body.”
Lucca jotted down the date and time of the surgery. “As I recall,” he said, “a national computer network matches patients to compatible organs as they become available.”
“Right.” Frank was impressed. “The United Network for Organ Sharing. Didn’t know you knew that much about it.”
“Come on, boss. I used to deal with the organ procurement team all the time when I worked in homicide.” He raised a shaggy eyebrow. “I hate to say this, boss, but you may not like what I find out.”
“Meaning?”
“You know, they want you to think that your donor was a brilliant, clean-cut, young premed student killed in some tragic traffic accident. Actually”—he casually crossed one long leg over the other—“with helmet laws, car restraints and tougher drunk-driving laws, thanks in large part to MADD, traffic deaths are down by at least forty percent. Most organ donors these days are gunshot victims. There’d be even more, except that the lifestyle that got ‘em shot usually means that locating the immediate family is a problem and the hospital can’t keep ‘em going long enough for us to find ‘em and get permission in time. In homicide we tried to work with ‘em as much as we could, but the investigation has to take priority. Our manpower hadda be spent looking for the shooter, not the victim’s next of kin. Just so you know, your donor was probably no Eagle Scout.” He shrugged.
“I’m not harboring any fantasies.” Frank pushed away from his desk and stepped to the window overlooking the bustling mall below.
“For the most part,” Lucca said, “people die like they live. We’re probably gonna come up with a shanky character, or some gang member who got himself popped.”
“I don’t think so.” Frank shook his head. “But no matter. You don’t know what it’s like.” He turned to face the detective. “I feel like I’m sixteen years old again. Starting over. Got a whole new lease from a stranger. In my book you don’t accept gifts without a thank-you, especially when that gift is the miracle of life. It may sound corny, but this is payback time. If the family doesn’t need anything, the least I can do is thank them.”
“Can’t argue with that, boss.”
“But I can’t shake a gut feeling that something is waiting out there that I need to do for them. I can’t sleep, thinking about it.”
“I always say, never argue with your gut. But don’t say I didn’t warn you. How far you want me to go?”
“Just the name of the donor and the address of the family member who gave permission. I’ll take it from there.” He moved back to his desk. “You’ll want to start in Florida. Here’s how it works. When a donor becomes available, the computer searches statewide for a match. If none is found, they check the entire region. That includes Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee. If no suitable recipient is found, they go nationwide. He could be from anywhere. That’s a lot of turf to cover.”
Lucca’s dark eyes took on an amused glint. “I wouldn’t lose any more sleep over it, boss.”
The detective got slowly to his feet. They shook hands and he headed for the door.
“How long you think it will take?” Frank called after him.
“How’s tomorrow sound?” Lucca said over his shoulder. He turned and faced Frank. “Tell you the truth, you could be the poster boy for heart transplants. I never would have guessed.” He paused for a moment, then nodded at the black leather bag on Frank’s desk. “Your medication, right?”